Refugee Health | Faulty Poster | 2019

FAMILY PLANNING BELIEFS AND BEHAVIORS AMONG AFRICAN REFUGEE WOMEN

Kafuli Agbemenu, Samantha Auerbach,Gloria Aidoo-Frimpong,Tim Brown, Helen Wang, AND Gretchen Ely
Sample Characteristics by Country of Birth (N=101).

Sample Characteristics by Country of Birth (N=101)

Introduction

  • African refugee women comprise a growing and distinct population at-risk for poor sexual and reproductive health, however, are seldom distinctly examined in the literature, particularly related to their sexual and reproductive health attitudes and behaviors towards family planning.
  • Evidence from outside the United States suggests resettled African women report religio-cultural barriers to using family planning methods, in addition to barriers related to lack of knowledge, particularly regarding misconceptions related to side-effects and long-term effects on fertility. 
  • These beliefs have not yet been adequately evaluated among African women resettled in US.
  • In this study, we describe beliefs towards pregnancy, and family planning behaviors in a sample of African refugee women resettled in Buffalo, New York.

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Project Links

  • Reproductive health decision‐making among US‐dwelling Somali Bantu refugee women: A qualitative study
    6/11/20
    Dr. Kafuli Agbemenu, assistant professor of nursing, conducts innovative community-based research to improve the reproductive health of vulnerable and marginalized populations of women living in the U.S. Her most recent study, , published in the Journal of Clinical Nursing, aimed to explore Somali Bantu refugee women's reproductive health decision-making, as influenced by their resettlement in the U.S. The study revealed that children are, for Somali Bantu Women, considered as wealth. If health care providers are equipped with a more culturally nuanced understanding of factors that influence reproductive health decision-making, they can provide person-centered care that meets their patients needs and is appropriate.